Farmers
have a new set of free tools to help them make crop decisions.
University
of Missouri Extension agricultural economist Ray Massey and Pat Guinan,
climatologist for MU Extension Commercial Agriculture, are collaborating with
participants across the nation to make information easily available.
Massey
and Guinan recently presented at MU’s Crop Management Conference in Columbia.
The
websites are important because access to historical climate data helps farm
operations that depend on favorable temperatures and precipitation patterns,
Massey said.
In October, the Midwestern Regional Climate Center (MRCC) began
offering online data free of charge, Guinan said. Previously, much of the
climate center’s data archive was available only by subscription.
The
MRCC is a cooperative program of the Illinois State Water Survey and the National
Climatic Data Center. Information is available at mrcc.isws.illinois.edu/CLIMATE.
MRCC’s Application Tools Environment, or “cli-MATE,” offers data with
easy-to-read visuals for free. Customizable charts include growing season
statistics, frost/freeze probabilities and information on degree days.
The
Vegetation Impact Program (VIP) monitors and assesses real-time information from MRCC on the same website. MU
collaborates with other universities and agencies across the United States on
this site. Data from VIP helps producers with frost and freeze guidance, stress
degree days and the Keetch-Byram Drought Index. Information on chilling hours
is being developed.
MU
Extension also offers Horizon Point.
There are rainfall runoff estimators, weed scouting aids, insect scouting aids,
fall nitrogen application charts and planting-depth soil temperature, among the
many offerings. Users can subscribe to receive advisories by email.
Missouri’s Mesonet presents
information from weather stations in 30 locations, 20 of which are real-time. A
new station in Lawrence County is set to go live in 2014. The Mesonet site
is agebb.missouri.edu/weather/stations.
The Community Collaborative Rain, Hail and Snow Network (CoCoRaHS) includes
information from several hundred precipitation observers in Missouri counties.
Users may also sign up to be a CoCoRaHS weather observer.
MU
is one of 12 partners in the new five-year “Useful to Usable” (U2U)
project to provide decision tools on climate, growing degree days, split
nitrogen application and crop water use in the nation’s Corn Belt.
U2U
has two online decision-support tools: AgClimate View provides a historical
view of climate and yield across the Corn Belt. Growing Degree Day allows
producers to enter planting date and hybrid to obtain estimates of when
critical events such as silking, black layer and freeze might occur.
Yield
data for corn and soybean can be plotted and compared over a five-year period
on the U2U site. The interactive site also lets users compare nitrogen
application using variable prices and percentages.
The Missouri Climate Center, through MU’s Department of Soil, Environmental and
Atmospheric Sciences, offers numerous weather and climate-related articles and
resources.
Climate Basic is a new free data
system offering weather, soil and crop data at a field level. You can sign up
for this service at www.climate.com and
enter University of Missouri in the “agent” field.
Guinan
says there are many freely available climate resources on the Web, ranging from
global to local. Some of these include:
- National Climatic Data Center
- NOAA Climate Portal
- Regional Climate Centers
- State Climate Offices
- National Weather Service
- Climate Prediction Center
MU
also has several other agronomy weather sites that are in beta testing.
(by Linda Geist, MU
Writer)
No comments:
Post a Comment